Lebanon's prime By TERRY A. ANDERSON Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan and his eight-man Cabinet resigned yesterday, and President Amin Gemayel said he might scrap the May 17 troop withdrawal agreement with Israel as demanded by his opponents. Wazzan, a Sunni Moslem; said he was stepping down to allow formation of a national coalition government that might help • end Lebanon's factional bloodshed. After accepting the resignations, Gemayel, a Maronite Christian, called for a cease-fire and said he was inviting Lebanon's warring Moslem and Christian factions to Geneva for reconciliation talks Feb. 27. "The agreement (with Israel) has put us in an embarassing impasse that led me to refrain from ratifying it," Gemayel said in a speech broadcast on nationwide television. "I see it necessary to continue all efforts to find a formula that would guarantee the complete withdrawals (of foreign troops) from all Lebanese territories to safeguard Lebanon's independence and sovereignty." NEM , • ' •Atd a C * .• 4iVe • , 0606'` Behind the scenes Kim Goss (senior-marketing) seems to be writing in space, but tell-tale reflections ment for Gamma Phi,Beta's first annual "Dating Game." The event will be held at reveal that she is actually painting on a window. Goss' message is an advertise- 10 a.m. next Sunday, in 301 HUB. By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. —The Westar VI satellite, which was lost after being launched from the space shuttle Challenger, was found yesterday, "completely healthy" but in the wrong orbit, leading officials to call it "a total loss." A ground station in California succeeded in changing the satellite's attitude so that its batteries could charge from the sun's energy, said Bill Ziegler, a spokesman for Western Union, which owns Wester VI. "As far as we know, we have a spacecraft (satellite) that's in the wrong orbit that's completely healthy," he said. However, there was no hope of raising the satellite to its planned 22,300-mile-high orbit where it would be stationary above Earth, he said. The most that can be hoped for is that "we might get a few hours twice a day," he said. "In the parlance of cars, I think it's a total loss." The satellite, representing a $75 million investment by Western Union, was ejected from the shuttle's cargo bay Friday. The loss was insured, the company said. There was "no evidence of any damage to the spacecraft" and the .~~`'~''~M`'' ': 3,4‘., 144;1 • ;`",l4‘7l"';'""iir* . . . . . . . . . • .• • „. . . . . • . . . . . . . • •• . . . . . . • . .. • • • . . . . . , . • . . . . . , /., • . '• • pace shuttle satellite located Wes:tar VI functioning properly but in wrong orbit failure apparently was in the rocket that was to carry it to geosynchronous orbit, he said. The satellite had separated from the rocket, called a Payload Assist Module, he said. In early ground testing of the booster rocket, it had failed when a nozzle came apart, allowing the rocket plume to surround and overheat the rest of the engine, Ziegler said. This caused an undirected firing and eventually snuffed out the flame. Based on radar data, the failure in space was consistent with the one experienced during ground testing, 'he said. The orbit that Westar. VI achieved and a second large object seen on radar bolstered that theory, he said. Ziegler said that Westar VI could stay in orbit for years but he doubted whether any rescue was possible. "This satellite wasn't designed for that purpose with that possibility in mind, because it was intended to go up to geosynchronous orbit," he said. "Maybe at some point we could bring in another PAM engine up there, attach it and go on from there. But that's pretty far-out thinking." Meanwhile, the shuttle was dogged again by bad luck this time by a burst balloon but the government of Indonesia gave the the daily A few minutes after his 15-minute speech, artillery shells and rockets could be heard crashing into Beirut's embattled southern suburbs. Earlier, Shiite Moslem militiamen seized control of much of the road to the Beirut airport, where U.S. Marines are based, leaving the Lebanese army in control of a single checkpoint. Twelve people were killed in heavy fighting yesterday between the army and the Shiite Amal militia at the Galerie Semaan crossing in Beirut, bringing the toll from the four-day battle to at least 70 slain and more than 250 wounded, police reported. Gemayel accepted the resignation of the Cabinet the day after a top Shiite Moslem leader called on all Moslem ministers to resign from the government. Wazzan and three other Cabinet members are Moslems Five are Christian. "I hope, rather I insist you immediately accept it," Wazzan said he told Gemayel. The presidential palace said Gemayel asked Wazzan to stay on as a caretaker until a new Cabinet could be formed, then immediately called in the speaker of ~ N ~ ;,~; '', ~~:~; :- , t e.... ....4.a41-!,:.., ~~.x.G ~.;1• ~'~D c, l ~, j